How come when it comes to personal programming projects, I have a stack of idea's, but when it's for study, I can't think of a thing?!
Thoughts, opinions, flames?
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How come when it comes to personal programming projects, I have a stack of idea's, but when it's for study, I can't think of a thing?!
Thoughts, opinions, flames?
Quote:
Thoughts, opinions, flames?
Ok, this shall be fun.
[flame] Stealth, I bite my thumb at you. [/flame]
(If you don't know what this means, look it up in a dictionary of old english. I learned it from R+J.)
do you bite your thumb at us sir?
Quote:
Originally posted by [stealth]
How come when it comes to personal programming projects, I have a stack of idea's, but when it's for study, I can't think of a thing?!
Thoughts, opinions, flames?
Depends on what kind of studying you're talking about.........studying what?
>> do you bite your thumb at us sir?
hehe, Tybalt, you are always quick to the trigger.
I bite my thumb sir, but not at you sir.:D (We really need some of the flashdaddee smilie's)
Forsooth sir, and in whichest direction dost your thumb-biting be aimed?
For if 'tis in my direction, then have at thee varlet!
about this... er... i find it difficult to actually code all my ideas... in fact! rest assured that the products of my efforts are quite off my original intention... and about now, it's been so long that i forgot what my original intention was... so i'm in a programming void right, and it really stinks...
howdy,
is thumb-biting the same as nose thumbing,
i thumb my nose at you sir, no not at you i simply thumb my nose.
M.R.
>>i thumb my nose at you sir
Personally I find that fingers are much better for that purpose. They are much more manuverable and smaller in size, which leads to much less pain.
Back on topic, why not just do a clone of some popular program?
Its boring I know but atleast you have a working model to base yours on, that makes things a lot easier.
It's interesting that you say that shtarker, because I came to that conclusion last night! I'm going to modify a program by Bruce Eckel that deals with emergence, and (hopefully) improve upon it.